Nesting disk separator plates for use in hard disk drives

ABSTRACT

A hard disk drive with a multiple disk stack normally utilizes disk separator plates near the disk surfaces to reduce wind induced vibrations in the disks and the read/write heads. The manufacturing methods currently used to make these separator plates, metal casting and machining, or injection molded plastic, or extruding and machining, or cold forging tends to be expensive and creates unwanted weight and bulk without the desired precision. Stamping disk separator plates from metal provides exceptional dimensional control at reduced cost, but cannot readily provide the thicknesses required. Stamping and extruding the offsets, or stamping and folding the offsets, is a manufacturing process that provides the required dimensions for the offsets, and dimensional control and reduced cost.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a division of application Ser. No. 13/893,107 filedMay 13, 2013 for DISK SEPARATOR PLATES AND METHOD OF MAKING DISKSEPARATOR PLATES FOR HARD DISK DRIVES.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention

The present invention relates to disk separator plates for reducingairborne noise and vibration in hard disk drives, and more particularly,pertains to methods of manufacturing disk separator plates.

2. Description of Related Art

It has been common practice for hard disk drives (HDD) to incorporatedisk separator plates in order to reduce vibration caused by windcreated by the rotating disk surfaces. This generates undesired noise inthe hard disk drive assembly. It is thought that the disk separatorplates should cover a maximum of the disk surfaces in order to minimizethese vibration effects. It has been experimentally proven that the mainairflow in a hard disk drive assembly, which is tangential to thecircumferential edge of the rotating disks causes vortexes to be createdbetween the airflow fluid layers, causing disk flutter and vibration ofthe magnetic reading heads during operation, thereby increasing noiseand decreasing HDD performance.

The use of disk separator plates in hard disk drives has become commonplace. This increased use of disk separator plates in a hard disk driveincreases the cost of the disk drive because of the increased rawmaterials required, and the secondary manufacturing operations requiredto make the disk separator plates, after initial stamping, forging,extrusion or casting.

FIG. 1 illustrates the environment in which disk separator plates of thepresent invention, also known as air damper plates disk damages, andanti disks, are utilized in a hard disk drive 9 which has a housing 11with side walls 15 and 13 and a top enclosing the housing (not shown).

Contained within the housing 11 is the actuator drive assembly 17. Anactuator 19, along with actuator arms 21 that carry read/write heads(22) are part of the drive assembly. A disk separator plate 25 ismounted over a top disk 23 to the side walls 15 and 13, or in any otherconvenient manner, to the housing 11 of hard disk drive 9. Besides beingmounted over a disk stack 23, the disk separator plates are mountedbetween each of the disks in the disk stack, as will be explainedhereinafter.

The shape and construction of the disk separator plates in the prior artare quite varied, although they have a common purpose of reducingairflow induced vibration.

FIG. 2 illustrates a disk separator plate 27 which is manufactured bycasting and then machining to provide the correct thickness and flatnessof the offset structures 31, 29, 32, and 33 which are used to hold thedisk separator plate to the housing of a hard disk drive. Pins 30 and 34are inserted into the casting or are machined from the casting assecondary operations. These pins mate with corresponding holes in thenext separator plate in the stack, or in the drive base.

FIG. 3 illustrates a disk separator plate 35 that is manufactured byinjection molding a plastic material. The plastic separator plate 35 hasoffset structures 37, 38 and 39 formed in the molding process.

FIG. 4 shows a disk separator plate 41 which is manufactured byextrusion and then milled or turned to reduce the main disk separatorplate thickness 44 and establish the offset structures 42, 45, 46required for mounting the disk separator plate to the housing of a harddisk drive. Boss 43 is milled from the extrusion to provide locationalignment by nesting with an opposing separator plate or a drive base.

Each of these manufacturing processes has considerable shortcomings withrespect to cost for the manufacturing methods used to produce metal diskseparator plates. Furthermore, the ability to produce separator platesto precise dimensional control is difficult for each of the abovedescribed methods of manufacture.

The plastic injection molding process has special problems associatedwith it. The method produces voids and anisotropies in the product. Theplastic plates are distorted when clamped. The plates are not as cleanas required. The surface finish is not as smooth as required.

The major problem with the metal disk separator plates is the cost ofmanufacturing such plates.

FIG. 5 illustrates a side cross-section of a stack of disk separatorplates 49, 51, 53, which are fastened to the enclosure 47 of a hard diskdrive by a hold down bolt 55. The stack of disk separator platesillustrated is designed to cover the portions of the disks not swept bythe use of the recording heads (not shown) which would rotate in thespace between disk separator 49 and 51, 51 and 53, and 53 and the base54 of housing 47. Hub 57 is the center around which the disks rotate.

The offsets 56, which are designed to provide the correct amount ofseparation between the disk separators 49, 51, and 53, and the base 54of the hard disk drive are created as part of the separator plate duringthe manufacturing process. As can be seen by the structure of the offset56 of separator plate 49, for example, the machining required afterinitial manufacturing is significant and increases the cost of eachseparator plate. The amount of metal required to make forged, fullymachined, or extruded and machined disk separator plates is largebecause the starting thickness is at least that of the full offsetheight. The main plate thickness of the separator plate must be createdby removing material.

Although flat stamped disk separator plates provide the best dimensionalcontrol, of all these manufacturing processes, at a minimummanufacturing cost, the stamping process cannot create the thickness, ormaterial reduction required in a typical offset at the mounting pointsfor the disk separator plate.

Accordingly, the present invention provides a method for manufacturingdisk separator plates using disk stamping techniques which reduce rawmaterial content and secondary manufacturing operations, while providingthe necessary offset heights, required at the offset points, used formounting the separator plates to the hard disk drive.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

Making a disk separator plate by stamping and then extruding the offsetsto a desired dimension, offset forming, or folding and making layers ofmaterial to obtain desired offset structure heights, provides a diskseparator plate that is dimensionally controlled, has less debris, lessweight and is less expensive to make than disk separator plates made bytraditional methods. Extruded offsets are designed to nest into opposingcounterbores to provide location alignment in-plane. This eliminates theneed for additional alignment pins and holes, freeing up space andenabling more compact designs. Folded offsets also provide for precisealignment of the separator plates, as needed, by the extension of pinsin the offset structures or by use of pins in the drive base. These pinsmate with corresponding holes in mating parts.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The exact nature of this invention, as well as the objects andadvantages thereof, will become readily apparent from consideration ofthe following specification in conjunction with the accompanyingdrawings in which like reference numerals designate like partsthroughout the figures thereof and wherein:

FIG. 1 is an illustration of a hard disk drive with a disk separatorplate located therein;

FIG. 2 is a perspective illustration of a prior art separator plate;

FIG. 3 is a perspective illustration of a prior art separator plate;

FIG. 4 is a perspective illustration of a prior art separator plate;

FIG. 5 is a side view illustration of a stack of prior art separatorplates assembled in a hard disk drive;

FIG. 6 is a side view of a hard disk drive with separator plates,according to the present invention;

FIG. 7 is a perspective illustration of a disk separator plate accordingto the present invention;

FIG. 8 is a perspective illustration of disk separator plates accordingto the present invention;

FIG. 9 is a perspective illustration of separator plate offsets,according to the present invention;

FIG. 10 is a perspective illustration of a disk separator plate,according to the present invention;

FIG. 11 is a perspective illustration of the counterbore in a diskseparator plate, according to the present invention;

FIG. 12 is a schematic illustration of the nesting of two disk separatorplates, according to the present invention;

FIG. 13 is a perspective illustration of stacked disk separator plates,according to the present invention;

FIG. 14 is a perspective illustration of stacked disk separator plates,according to the present invention;

FIG. 15 is a perspective illustration of a disk separator plate,according to the present invention;

FIG. 16 is a perspective illustration of stacked disk separator plates,according to the present invention;

FIG. 17 is a perspective illustration of a disk separator plate,according to the present invention, before an offset structure isformed;

FIG. 18 is a perspective illustration of a disk separator plate, afterthe offset structure is formed;

FIG. 19 is a perspective illustration of a disk separator plate with analternate offset, according to the present invention;

FIG. 20 is a perspective illustration of the offset assembly of FIG. 19;

FIG. 21 is a perspective illustration of the offset assembly of FIG. 20in a finished state; and

FIG. 22 is a perspective illustration of stacked disk separator platesutilizing the offset assembly of FIG. 21.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

FIG. 6 illustrates a stack of separator plates 61, 63, 65, manufacturedaccording to the present invention, attached to a housing 59 of a harddisk drive. The upper separator plate 61 and the lower separator plate65 create the required offset between separator plates 61 and 63, 63 and65, and 65 and the base 66 respectively, by offset forming the ends ofthe separator plate 61 and 65 a certain distance to create the offset 71for separator plate 61 and the offset 73 for separator plate 65. Thecenter separator plate 63 is not bent and has no offset. The stack ofseparator plates 61, 63, and 65, is assembled on a standoff 68 which ispart of the frame 59 of the hard disk drive housing. The stack isfastened down by a fastening bolt 67.

The disks (not shown) that rotate in the spaces between the separatorplates 61 and 63, 63 and 65 and 65 and the base 66, are attached to arotating spindle 69, in a manner well known.

Manufacturing the separator plates of FIG. 6 by stamping and thenforming the ends to create a standoff has proven to be a less expensivemethod of manufacturing, while at the same time producing a moreaccurately dimensioned disk of separator plates. Moreover, much less rawmaterial is required since the raw material thickness is close to thesmaller plate tip thickness 72, instead of the larger offset thickness71.

FIG. 7 illustrates a disk separator plate manufactured by stamping theshape of the plate 75 out of a preferred metal such as aluminum, alongwith the tabs 77, 81, 79. The offset on the tabs is formed by offsetforming, essentially two right angle bends. Pins 76 and 82 are extrudedduring stamping to provide location alignment.

FIG. 8 illustrates two disk separator plates mounted together. A topplate 75 is mounted to a bottom plate 83 to create a gap 80 within whicha disk rotates. The tabs 85, 89, and 87 are joined together so that thealignment pins and holes 76 and 78, line up.

FIG. 9 schematically illustrates the offset bends 84 and 86 in the upperdisk separator plate 75 and the lower disk separator plate 83 thatcreate the respective tabs 85A and 85B. These tabs are mated together toform tab 85.

Besides creating offsets in the stamped plates by offset forming, thepresent invention creates offsets by extrusion from thinner rawmaterial. Extrusion of an offset boss is illustrated in FIG. 10, whichshows a disk separator plate 91 having tabs with extruded offset bosses93, 97, and 95 which create the offset structure. It is contemplatedthat the top face of the disk separator plate around the perimeter ofthe offset boss 93 has a counterbore 101 with a diameter slightly largerthan the extruded boss (FIG. 11) to provide location alignment with theseparator plate above.

FIG. 12 schematically illustrates how two extruded offset bosses nest.The top plate 105 with offset boss 107 is supported by the bottom plate103 with offset boss 109, nesting offset boss 107 in the counterbore101.

It is contemplated that rather than creating a counterbore in the faceof a separator plate around each offset boss, the extruded offsets couldbe made larger in diameter than the apertures through the boss.

FIG. 13 illustrates three separator plates 113, 115, and 117 each havingextruded bosses as offsets 119, 121, and 123 respectively. The aperture125 through offset boss 119, for example, has a smaller diameter thanthe external diameter of offset boss 119, as do each of the otherseparator plates 115 and 117. The result is the three separator platescan be simply stacked one on top of the other, with the bottom of theboss of one plate 119 sitting on the top surface of disk separator plate115, and the bottom of offset boss 121 sitting on the top surface ofseparator plate 117.

A slight variation of this construction is illustrated in FIG. 14, whichshows separator plates 127, 129, and 131 having offset bosses 133, 135,and 137 that are extruded and then flared in a slightly upside-downV-shaped cross section with the top of the boss being smaller indiameter than the bottom. Thus, separator plate 127 with a V-shapedextruded offset boss 133 has a larger diameter at its base than at thetop. The aperture 139 which passes through boss 133 has a smallerdiameter than the top of boss 133. As a result, the separator plates127, 129, 131 all have the same footprint and each sit on top of theseparator plate below it. These V-shaped offset bosses allow use of thefull offset height when large aperture 139 lead-in radii are required togenerate enough material volume to create the required offset height.Without the flare, bosses 133 and 135 would recess into the aperturesand reduce the stack height.

The present invention also contemplates the creation of offsets instamped metal disk separator plates by double internal tabs. As shown inFIG. 15, a disk separator plate 141 has the tab internally cut 143 tocreate legs 144 and 146. These legs are then bent again at top surface141 of the disk to create the offset and bent at the end of the legs tocreate feet 145, 147. These feet extend beyond the diameter of theaperture 143.

This permits stacking of the disk separator plates as illustrated inFIG. 16. Disk separator plate 141 is stacked on disk separator plate149, which is, in turn, stacked on disk separator plate 157. The offsetlegs of disk separator plate 141 rest on the top surface of diskseparator plate 149 because of the feet 147 and 145 created by the bendin the legs 144, 146. The feet of disk separator plate 149, feet 155 and153 sit on the top surface of disk separator plate 157. The feet 161,163 of disk separator plate 157, sit on top of another disk separatorplate, or a fastening protrusion on the frame of a disk drive.

The present invention also contemplates the creation of offsets byfolding tabs in parallel. As illustrated in FIG. 17, a disk separatorplate 165 is stamped from a metal to create the shape of the diskseparator plate, as well as a tab configuration 167. This tabconfiguration will create the offset required. Two overlapping foldsaccurately align the apertures 169, 171, and 173 in the tab 167. FIG. 18shows the tab 167 after the parallel folds are completed. Aperture 173is on the bottom, aperture 171 is in the middle, as the result of firstbend 177. Aperture 169 is on top, as the result of second bend 165.Aperture 169 can also be pierced through all three layers after folding.Offset height can be reduced as required by corning the three foldedtabs during stamping.

The present invention also contemplates the creation of offsets in astamped disk separator plate by attaching a separate piece formed arounda fastening tab of the stamped separator plate.

FIG. 19 illustrates a disk separator plate 181 having a fastening tabwith an aperture 189 and a ridge 183 on the tab. A bent clip 185, havingan aperture 187 in the top and bottom legs of the clip, is formed to fitover the tab so the apertures 187 and 189 align, as illustrated in FIG.20. Upon alignment, the clip 185 is crimped and/or corned to the tab ofdisk separator plate 181 to create the required offset height, asillustrated in FIG. 21.

Disk separator plates manufactured in FIGS. 19-21 can be stacked asshown in FIG. 22. Disk separator plate 193 with its offset clip 195 isstacked on top of disk separator plate 197 with its offset 199. Theapertures 201 of both offsets align with considerable precision. Diskseparator plates using an attached offset can be easily stacked to anyrequired height.

What is claimed is:
 1. A disk separator plate for hard disk drives,comprising: a separator plate having a top and bottom surface andexternal edge with multiple mounting apertures in the separator plate,stamped from a single sheet of metal; and an extruded offset bosssurrounding each one of the plurability of mounting apertures extendingfrom the top surface of the separator plate for a predefined distance.2. The disk separator plate of claim 1 wherein each extruded offset bosshas a larger diameter at the predefined distance than at the surface ofthe separator plate.
 3. The disk separator plate of claim 1 furthercomprising a counterbore of the inner diameter of the offset boss for apredefined distance at the bottom surface of the separator plate, thecounterbore sized to receive the outer diameter of an extruded offsetboss from another separator plate.
 4. A disk separator plate for harddisk drives, comprising: a separator plate having a top and bottomsurface and external edge with a plurality, of tabs at predeterminedlocations on the external edge of the separator plate, each tab having atop and bottom surface and a mounting aperture, the separator platestamped from a single sheet of metal; and an extruded offset bosssurrounding each one of the mounting apertures in the plurality of tabsextending from a top surface of the tabs for a predefined distance. 5.The disk separator plate of claim 4 wherein each extruded offset bosshas a larger diameter at the predefined distance than at the top surfaceof the tab.
 6. The disk separator plate of claim 4 further comprising acounterbore at the inner diameter of the offset boss for a predefineddistance at the bottom surface of the tab, the counterbore sized toreceive the outer diameter of an extruded offset boss from anotherseparator plate.
 7. The disk separator plate of claim 4 wherein theoffset is formed by bending each tab a predefined distance from the edgeto form an offset of a center height.
 8. The disk separator plate ofclaim 4 wherein the offset is formed by bending each tab to fold overitself to form an offset of a certain height.
 9. The disk separatorplate of claim 4 wherein the offset is formed by clamping a U-shapedpiece on each tab to form an offset of a certain height.